To mean the same thing? If so there is content, joyful, cheerful,...
You could use words like... happy, elated, pleased, ecstatic, blissful...
Juice box is actually two separate words rather than one. However, each word has one syllable so, yes, it is two syllables.
Laughter/after. -apex
A strong syllable is a stressed syllable. This syllable is more prominent and stronger than the others, and are often found in multi-syllable words.
In terms of pronunciation, the vowel sounds of unstressed syllables of words with 3 or more syllables (even many 2-syllable words) will very often revert to the sound described as 'schwa', which is the neutral vowel sound, somewhat resembling 'uh' or 'ah'. Take the word indefinite. The syllables in the '-finite' part really have neutral vowel sounds, very much unlike the word finite, where the vowel sounds are like 'eye'. This is yet another thing that makes learning English a terror for those who speak languages with very regular pronunciation of vowels.
The one with more than four syllables.
You could use words like... happy, elated, pleased, ecstatic, blissful...
More words that mean happy: Merry- Cheerful- Gleeful- Glad- Joyful- Cotnent- Pleased- Jolly! Those are the ones that I could think off!
joyful exuberant deliriously delighted
Considerable. It has five syllables.
B. Pretentiously has four syllables. Considerable has five syllables. Accid has two syllables.
A rhyyme of one syllable words or, if more than one syllable, words ending with accented syllables.
hippopotomus, millenium, dodecahedron, euphonium, photosynthesis
8 Syllables First line 6 Syllables Second line 8 Syllables Third line 6 Syllables Fourth line
Stressed syllables are emphasized more in speech than unstressed syllables.
Probably "Happy Birthday to You".
A one syllable word has only one syllable. A ten syllable word has ten. There are no one syllable words with ten syllables.